No, that's you putting words in my mouth. I mean, your first reply to my commentary was specifically against me saying that there are multiple factors in criminology.
Yes, you can argue that because I said 'a factor that drives both' that I meant only one single ironclad factor, but in the context of all that I've written, it's clear that I'm talking about a range of changes - including, again, my comment that elicited your first response, where I explicitly point out multiple factors affect criminology. My first comment in this thread (the heavily downvoted one up there) pointed out two other factors that have been attributed to the decrease in crime as well.
I've also presented graphs of Australian violent crime that don't appear to follow trends in each other, let alone the supposed 'lead-free' crime reduction that this theory presents.
Exactly how many different factors do I have to present to potentially explain variability? To suggest that it's more than one factor that has a significant effect on crime?
Edit: I should probably also point out that the "a" factor I mentioned isn't a single thing that can be measured with a single number like "atmospheric lead", but a suite of many different things dealing with a wide-ranging cultural change (see response to DanBC below)
> I mean, your first reply to my commentary was specifically against me saying that there are multiple factors in criminology.
No, my first reply was that there very clearly was a high fit to the data, and so something is going on that is in need of explanation, be it lead or another confounding factor, and so it was nonsense to claim that it was nonsense that a single factor could matter.
> I've also presented graphs of Australian violent crime that don't appear to follow trends in each other, let alone the supposed 'lead-free' crime reduction that this theory presents.
> Exactly how many different factors do I have to present to potentially explain variability? To suggest that it's more than one factor that has a significant effect on crime?
You should present something. Otherwise you're engaged in know-nothingism: 'it could be something else! who knows? whoooo knooowwwwssssss...'
Yes, you can argue that because I said 'a factor that drives both' that I meant only one single ironclad factor, but in the context of all that I've written, it's clear that I'm talking about a range of changes - including, again, my comment that elicited your first response, where I explicitly point out multiple factors affect criminology. My first comment in this thread (the heavily downvoted one up there) pointed out two other factors that have been attributed to the decrease in crime as well.
I've also presented graphs of Australian violent crime that don't appear to follow trends in each other, let alone the supposed 'lead-free' crime reduction that this theory presents.
Exactly how many different factors do I have to present to potentially explain variability? To suggest that it's more than one factor that has a significant effect on crime?
Edit: I should probably also point out that the "a" factor I mentioned isn't a single thing that can be measured with a single number like "atmospheric lead", but a suite of many different things dealing with a wide-ranging cultural change (see response to DanBC below)